Hello.
This idea has bugged me last months: how about making a punch of
Linux songs? I already know R. Stallman has written a song about
free software; perhaps that could be worked out first.
This would be a good time to start because today I saw a BBC news
on how a song of a Japanese company turned out to be a hit.
The company placed video to their webpages and people kept downloading,
and now they have sold the song good. Other companies are now
making songs as well. If the boom spreads outside Japan, perhaps the
good old IBM songs are soon worked out as songs which appeal to our
generation.
When we make the songs, my wish is that the whole editing projects
are made available (not only the final mix). That way anyone could
make an another version using the same material. The songs would
then work as tutorials as well.
Regards,
Juhana
Does anyone have experience using an ECS N2U400-A or
ECS K7VTA3 motherboard for audio work? I'm thinking
about upgrading my system (from a PIII-550/SE440bx2)
but I don't have any experience with the newer gear.
Thanks,
Barton
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Does anybody know if there is a way in ardour to make multiple instances of the same plugin use the same automation track. I guess the propper way to say this is would there be a way to slave multiple plugins to one master automation track.
For instance, say there is a bus with multiple channels and I want to insert a plugin that just supports 1 IO. In order to process all the channels I insert multiple instances of the plugin for each channel in the bus. If I want to automate them all the same way though, is there a way to do what I described above?
regards,
-Reuben
Anyone using any of these Digital Audio Lab cards with ALSA? Their status
is listed as unknown on the ALSA site.
Matthew Polashek
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The latest version of the realtime Linux Security Module is now
available on SourceForge...
http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/realtime-lsm/realtime-lsm-0.1.1.tar.gz?d…
This release handles changes to the capabilities structure introduced
in Linux 2.6.6, but still works with earlier 2.6 kernels. There are
no functional changes. Unless you are running 2.6.6, there is no need
to upgrade. Changes in the 2.6.6 kernel makefiles affect the
procedure for building the realtime-lsm. Please consult the INSTALL
instructions for details.
The realtime LSM is an installable kernel module that enables realtime
capabilities for any 2.6 kernel without needing to directly patch the
kernel. It was written by Torben Hohn and Jack O'Quin, who make no
warranty concerning the safety, security or even stability of your
system when using it. It is provided under the provisions of the GPL.
--
joq
Eric Rz. wrote:
> If i'm not mistaken the 2496 is an ice1712 based card. You should use
> envy24control instead of alsamixer. Things will make much more sense. Be
> sure to check out the command line options available to limit the number
> of channels it displays.
Yes, I have one of those cards, too. Nice. Good quality audio. It is ice1712
based and envy24control works fine.
Hmm, I had a look for the command line options for envy24control in the man
page. Couldn't find anything to adjust number of input channels displayed.
That's with the alsa-tools-0.9.0rc6-53 that comes with SuSE 8.2. Maybe a
later one adds them? My envy24control shows all 10 PCM input channels of the
internal ice1712, even though the Audiophile-2496 only has 2 analog and SPDIF
digital (2 channels) inputs from the outside world. I haven't explored all
permutations and combinations of the panels.
Elsewhere, I've grumbled about the "lack of integration" between apps like
audacity and xmms volume slider and the envy24control. The volume sliders on
the apps are "dead". You MUST control the volume on the envy24control. Dunno
if that's a permanent condition? ...likely to get fixed? how?
(...unless someone else has some more info and/or pointers for us?)
BTW, I think I also had a "lock up" problem when trying to change clock source
between internal and SPDIF (back to internal?), using envy24control. I had to
"kick it around" before the change would "take". I'm not sure if SPDIF stuff
works, or is supported. I had other problems to fix, so I didn't pursue that
any farther. Sorry. I have a Johnson J-Station (guitar amp modeler) which
could provide SPDIF outputs, but I'm currently running its analog outputs
through a Peavey RQ-200 6 channel mixer into the Audiophile-2496 analog PCM 1
& 2 inputs. That works well enough, and I'm not desperate for more channels.
Converting A/D/A/D doesn't seem that bad, but I haven't listened that
closely. Good enough for the likes of me. I can put off wrestling with SPDIF
for a (long?) while. The engineer in me likes to see everything work.
> envy24control comes in the alsa-tools package.
--
Juhan Leemet
Logicognosis, Inc.
>
> From: Daniel James <daniel(a)mondodesigno.com>
> Date: 2004/05/13 Thu AM 08:27:37 GMT
> To: A list for linux audio users <linux-audio-user(a)music.columbia.edu>,
> <ico(a)fuse.net>
> Subject: Re: [linux-audio-user] New sound scheme for the Linux Desktop
>
> > I've come up with this new theme titled "Borealis."
>
> Sounds good to me - definitely an improvement. I heard Brian Eno did
> the start-up sound for Windows 95, so now we've got real competition
> on the desktop!
>
> Cheers
>
> Daniel
>
>
Thanks all for your very kind words! :-)
Best wishes,
Ico